The Rise And Fall Of The American Dream In The Great Gatsby

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Rise and fall of the American dream F.Scott Fitzgerald 's 'The Great Gatsby ' display what our society call the American Dream of a vulnerable gain of money, and fabricated fantasy Each main character in the novel leads a binary life, one in which they appear successful, and thus joyful, and one where the financial success is inappreciable, and yet they are happy. Gatsby is regarded by most people as notably successful, with a vast house, apparel and cars in excess, and some extraordinary parties. However, who really know Gatsby or where he came from, but the pipe dream of material success is more than enough for them to vision him as a wealthy exemplar of the American dream. What we absolutely master from Gatsby himself, his backdrop is modest, he used to work really hard to generate his living, unlike most of his material accomplishment is established by maintaining the illusion of being more than he is, Gatsby went to Oxford after the second world war on an English American exchange It eluded us then, but that 's no matter tomorrow we will run faster, stretch out our arms farther . . . .”(Fitzgerald 120). The author makes a fair link between what we call the American dream and Gatsby 's dream. Where his dream only operate as a motif for the acting idea of the American dream that result to a fraudulent, over materialistic and corrupted society that was truly attracted to wealth and personality status. Perfectly like Gatsby 's constant pursuit to achieve the American dream, we all will seek like Gatsby to indulge such an unreachable dream like his, most of the time we will never accomplish our dream but it is in human nature to keep on

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